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Tarfumes.com - Tweaked: A Crystal Meth Memoir

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List Price: $15.00
Our Price: $10.20
Your Save: $ 4.80 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Kensington
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 362.299092 EAN: 9780758212658 ISBN: 0758212658 Label: Kensington Manufacturer: Kensington Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 224 Publication Date: 2006-06-01 Publisher: Kensington Studio: Kensington
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Didn't meet my expectations Comment: I had high hopes when I purchased this book. I guess that's why I try to eliminate expectations when beginning a book. I didn't think the quality was high and was not very engaged by the story. It described sex addiction much better than Meth Addiction. Unfortunately, I wouldn't recommend the book if you are looking for inspiration. Perhaps if I finished the book it may have been better, but it didn't even keep my interest enough to do that. There are two many books to read and I don't have time for those that are not giving me insight or understanding into the nature of life and the Universe.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Fascinating in Ways I Didn't Expect Comment: As someone who has heard a lot about crystal meth but who has no experience with it, I turned to this book to develop an understanding of why crystal meth has affected gay men and influenced HIV transmission as much as it has. I did learn a lot from this book, though I thought I would learn more about how crystal meth affects the body and mind, how it clouds and mind and encourages unsafe sex, and there was not as much of that in this book. Though there were many scenes showing the damaging effects of crystal, and Moore did not seem to hold back in any way describing the negatives of his life on crystal. This is a good book worth the time.
Customer Rating:      Summary: "Tweaked" Comment: This is an excellent book. I thoroughly enjoyed it, as I have some knowledge of this addiction and found it to be true to form.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Well-written, engaging, educational, but not much about meth addiction Comment: I enjoyed this book---it certainly kept me turning pages throughout, and I finished it almost in one sitting. However, I would agree with some of the other reviewers in that the book seems to be more about Moore's sex addiction than his meth addiction. The book chronicles Moore's sexual escapades in 1980s New York and 1990s Los Angeles; it seems Moore just used meth and a host of other drugs to lubricate his sexual excesses. The only section of the book that exposes meth's dark underbelly is when he goes out to visit a "cooker" who lives in the California desert and cooks the drug in a trailer. I think a more apt title for the book would be "SCREWED" rather than TWEAKED due to its highly sexual content, but this book is worth a read nonetheless, especially if the ins and outs of pre-gentrification New York's sexual underground of the 80s and early 90s interests you.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An X-Rated account of life as a promiscuous gay drug user Comment: "Biker's Coffee, Chicken Feed, Crank, Glass, Go-Fast, Ice, Stove Top, Trash and Yellow Barn," that is, Crystal Meth, is what I expected this book to be about. But Tweaked is more about the details of Patrick Moore's seemingly infinite gay unprotected sexual exploits while using a variety of drugs than it is about meth addiction, although it's probably hard to separate the two. The writing itself is excellent, but Gay Sex on Drugs might have been a more appropriate title, and its X-Rated theme will be interesting to few mainstream readers.
The details about meth, meth-use and meth-users, few and far between, are by far the most interesting parts. Unfortunately, the struggles of a sober gay man, the relationship between a man and his grandma, and details about an unimaginable variety of different drugs, did not hold my attention. I kept waiting for the parts about meth. It would be more appropriate divided up as a series of articles in a magazine for gay men. If you are an average Jane like me, you'll skip this one in favor of a future, (hopefully mainstream) novel. Although admittedly full of lies and half-truths, James Frey's R-Rated quirkily-written but fast-paced account of alcohol abuse and recovery, A Million Little Pieces, is a better choice.
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